Scotty James

Snowboarding

“Impossible is just a big word thrown around by small men who find it easier to live in the world they’ve been given than to explore the power they have to change it. Impossible is not a fact. It’s an opinion. Impossible is not a declaration. It’s a dare. Impossible is potential. Impossible is temporary. Impossible is nothing.” - Muhammed Ali

Personal Details

Nickname:

SJ

Home town:

Warrandyte / Monaco

Occupation / Area of Study / Work:

Professional athlete / Sport, Business & Entertainment

Hero / Most Admired Athlete:

Anyone pursuing their passion

Date of birth:

6 July 1994

Sporting Details

Event(s) / Discipline:

Half pipe

Olympic / Paralympic History:

2022, Beijing Winter Olympic Games, Silver 

2018, Pyeongchang Winter Olympic Games, Bronze

2014, Sochi Winter Olympic Games (Slopestyle)

2010, Vancouver Winter Olympic Games (Slopestyle) 

World Championships History:

Winter X Games 

6 x Gold Medallist | 2017, 2019, 2020, 2022, 2023, 2024

2 x Silver Medallist | 2018, 2021 

2 x Bronze Medallist | 2016, 2017 

FIS Snowboard World Cup 

4 x Gold Medallist | 2013-14, 2016-17, 2019-20

1 x Bronze Medallist | 2013-14 

Sporting Highlights:

Everything, I've enjoyed the whole journey!


Triple World Snowboard Halfpipe champion and current FIS Crystal Globe winner Scotty James was described in March 2017 as probably ‘the most popular Australian sports star in America’.

The snowboarder from Melbourne has come a long way from the 15-year-old who was the youngest male of all competing nations at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. At the time, he was also Australia's youngest male Olympian in 50 years.

James’ first snowboard was a $10 display board from Vancouver as a gift from his father and was the only board small enough for him to ride.

He was competing by age six and by ten he was beating the older kids, then moved from racing into Halfpipe and his first international event as a 14-year-old at the 2008 Europa Cup in Saas Fee, Switzerland.

In 2010, Scotty James was a last-minute addition to the Australian Olympic Team for the Vancouver Games when teammate Nate Johnstone was ruled out of the Games with an injury.

James rushed to the World Cup in Stoneham, Canada to achieve the top 19 result required for eligibility to replace Johnstone. His 15th place secured a ticket to Vancouver, where he produced a fantastic performance beyond his years to finish 21st.

After Vancouver and later in 2010 James competed in the World Junior Halfpipe and Slopestyle Championships finishing 15th and 16th respectively.

From early 2011 to 2012 all his World Cup results in Halfpipe, Slopestyle and Big Air climbed into top ten territory – at a time when he was growing taller.

At the 2013 World Championships in Stoneham, Canada, Scotty notched a career best performance of sixth in the Halfpipe – and also placed 16th in Slopestyle.

Competing at the last event of the 2013/14 season before the Sochi Games, James won his first World Cup medal - bronze in the Snowboard Halfpipe, plus two top-ten finishes at other World Cups in the season. His results and points left James as the highest points scorer, earning him the Overall World Cup Title for Snowboard Halfpipe and his first FIS Crystal Globe.

Scotty also put down one of the best performances of his career to date at the X-Games in Aspen, CO, USA, coming in fourth.

At the 2014 Sochi Olympic Winter Games he was one of a handful of athletes to compete in both Slopestyle and Halfpipe – placing 16th in Slopestyle and 21st in Halfpipe.

The emerging threat the young Australian could be to USA’s Halfpipe King and Vancouver gold medallist Shaun White came in 2015 when James won the 2015 World Championships in Kreischberg, Austria.  

A huge boost to James career in 2016 was coming away with a bronze medal from the Aspen, Colorado X-Games in January 2016 but there was more to come.  

In mid-December 2016 James began his World Cup season with a fourth at Copper Mountain, USA, then in January 2017 - silver in Laax, Switzerland.

January 26, 2017 – Australia Day – was a day to celebrate when Scotty James won the Winter X Games Superpipe Final in Aspen, Colorado in a field stacked with the world’s best riders including Shaun White (USA Olympic Gold Medallist 2010) and Iouri Podladitchkov (Russian Olympic Gold Medallist 2014).

At the Olympic Test Event and World Cup in Phoenix PyeongChang in February 2017, James again rode brilliantly winning gold in emphatic style and under immense pressure.

In March 2017, fresh from his World Cup victory in Korea James went on to Sierra Nevada, Spain to defend his World Championship title and be awarded his second FIS Crystal Globe.

At the 2017 Ski & Snowboard Australia Awards, Scotty James was jointly named with Mogul Skier Britt Cox as Athlete of the Year. Both World Champions, both FIS Crystal Globe winners.

James created history as the first Australian male to win a snowboard Olympic medal at PyeongChang 2018. The 2017 World Champion, who was also the 2018 Australian Opening Ceremony Flag Bearer, came away with the bronze medal for Australia with a top score of 92.00 in the final.

James had a remarkable 2018-2019 season, winning each of the six events he entered. His “perfect season” included gold medals at the Dew Tour, X-Games, US Grand Prix, Laax Open and the US Burton Open and the 2019 World Championships.

The World Championship victory in Park City in February 2019 is James' third consecutive World Championship title following wins in Kreischberg, Austria, in 2015 and Sierra Nevada, Spain, in 2017 - An unprecedented achievement as both the first-ever Snowboard rider and Australian winter sports athlete to do so.

James again dominated the world stage in 2019-2020, winning five times and landing on the podium at all seven events during his season.  James won World Cup events in USA, China and Switzerland at Copper Mountain, Secret Garden and Laax and pro events the X-Games in Aspen and the Dew Tour in Colorado. James also claimed the third World Cup title of his career at the final FIS World Cup Snowboard Halfpipe event of the season in Calgary, Canada.

For the third time in his career, James was named winner of the Olympic Athlete of the Year title for the 2020 Snow Australia Awards, sharing the award along with aerial skier Laura Peel.

James had another outstanding season in 2020-2021, with three medals in the three events he competed in. At the World Championships in Aspen, USA, James fell just short of a historic fourth straight halfpipe World Championship gold medal, claiming the silver. James also took home silver medals at the World Cup event in Laax, Switzerland, and the X-Games in Aspen.

In 2022, James won silver at the Beijing Winter Olympic Games. 

CREDIT: OWIA


VIS Award of Excellence winner - 2018, 2019

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